Abstract

This paper introduces a distributed fault-tolerant topology control algorithm, called the Disjoint Path Vector (DPV), for heterogeneous wireless sensor networks composed of a large number of sensor nodes with limited energy and computing capability and several supernodes with unlimited energy resources. The DPV algorithm addresses the $k$ -degree Anycast Topology Control problem where the main objective is to assign each sensor’s transmission range such that each has at least $k$ -vertex-disjoint paths to supernodes and the total power consumption is minimum. The resulting topologies are tolerant to $k-1$ node failures in the worst case. We prove the correctness of our approach by showing that topologies generated by DPV are guaranteed to satisfy $k$ -vertex supernode connectivity. Our simulations show that the DPV algorithm achieves up to 4-fold reduction in total transmission power required in the network and 2-fold reduction in maximum transmission power required in a node compared to existing solutions.

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